Google officials are “putting profits before country” by working with Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei to develop and install “smart speakers” in the homes of millions of U.S. consumers, according to three Republican senators.
“Yet recent reports revealed that, until the President [Donald Trump] placed Huawei on a trade blacklist because of that company’s problematic association with the Chinese Communist Party, you were working closely with Huawei to develop ‘smart speakers’ for use in the United States,” the senators wrote.
That revelation demonstrated, the senators wrote, that “you and Huawei ‘were even closer than previously understood.’ These devices can enable untrustworthy companies to listen in on Americans’ conversations.
“Your attempts three weeks ago to downplay your involvement in China, plus new revelations about your close relationship with Huawei, raise serious questions.”
In addition, Google developed an internet search engine called “Google.cn” that was used by the Chinese regime to censor information the country’s citizens could access via the World Wide Web.
The company ended that program in 2010, but has more recently been developing another search engine via a project known as “Dragonfly.”
The senators also pointed out that, during the continuing protests in Hong Kong, Google’s translation application changed the phrase, “I am sad to see Hong Kong become part of China” to “I am happy” for the former British colony to be absorbed into the mainland Chinese regime.
“Huawei poses serious concerns about national security. The oppressive Chinese Communist Party exercises enormous influence over the company. Huawei has even admitted that it hosts a branch of the party within the company itself,” the senators told Pichai.
“What due diligence did Google perform before agreeing to help Huawei put a listening device into millions of American living rooms,” the senators asked. “To what extent did you consider the national security implications of helping Huawei?
“And why did your partnership continue for months after the federal government unsealed an indictment that, in the words of the Washington Post, showed that Huawei ‘is determined to succeed by using theft and duplicity?’”
Such actions amount to putting profits before country, the senators wrote.
The senators addressed five additional questions to Pichai and asked that he respond by Aug. 30:
Why did you partner with Huawei to develop listening devices for use in the United States?
Why did you continue that partnership even after the Department of Justice released an indictment charging that Huawei, as The Washington Post put it, “is determined to succeed by using theft and duplicity”?
What did you learn about national security vulnerabilities with listening devices while working with Huawei, and what steps, if any, did you take to eliminate national security risks from these devices?
What consideration, if any, did you give to the national security risk posed by Huawei before agreeing to work with them on this sensitive project?
The reports about this project state that you “suspended” the project because Huawei was placed on a trade blacklist. Do you plan to resume helping Huawei install listening devices into American homes if the blacklist is lifted?
Rubio, Hawley, and Cotton are among the Senate’s most outspoken critics of Huawei and of Beijing’s aggressive economic, diplomatic, and military initiatives designed to supplant the United States as the world’s dominant power.
Friends Read Free